While income appears to be the most likely indicator of access,
racial and ethnic divides exist as well. In a March 2000 poll
by National Public Radio, the Kaiser Family Foundation and
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government reported that schools
are playing an important role in equalizing access to computers
for children.
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders Lead
August 2000 data show that noticeable divides still exist
among different racial and ethnic groups. Asian Americans
and Pacific Islanders have maintained the highest level
of home Internet access at 56.8%. Blacks and Hispanics,
at the other end of the spectrum, continue to experience
the lowest household Internet penetration rates at 23.5%
and 23.6% respectively. While about one-third of the U.S.
population uses the Internet at home, only 16.1% of Hispanics
and 18.9% of Blacks use the Internet at home.
Access for Blacks and Hispanics Lags
Since 1997, rates of computer and Internet use by
individuals have increased for each broad race/ethnic
category. However, Whites and Asian American Pacific
Islanders have had higher rates of both computer and
Internet use than Blacks and Hispanics. In looking
at Internet use alone, the rates of growth were faster
for Blacks and Hispanics than Whites and Asian Americans/Pacific
Islanders. From December 1998 to September 2001, Internet
use among Blacks grew at an annual rate of 31 percent
and for Hispanics it grew at an annual rate of 26
percent while growth for Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders
was only 21 percent and for Whites it was only 19
percent.
| Gap
in Home Internet Usage Widens (except for Asians)
Even as Use Increases |
 |
|
White
|
Black
|
Gap
|
Hispanic
|
Gap
|
Asian
|
Gap
|
| Dec
1998 |
37.6%
|
19%
|
18.6%
|
16.6%
|
21%
|
35.8%
|
1.8%
|
| Sept
2001 |
59.9%
|
39.8%
|
20.1%
|
31.6%
|
28.3%
|
60.4%
|
-.5%
|
|
| Computer Usage Grew |
 |
|
White
|
Black
|
Hispanic
|
Asian
|
| Oct
1997 |
57.5%
|
43.6%
|
38%
|
57.5%
|
| Sept
2001 |
70%
|
55.7%
|
48.8%
|
71.2%
|
|
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce's National Telecommunications
Infrastructure Administration, A Nation Online: How Americans
Are Expanding Their Use Of The Internet, February, 2002,
based on findings from the September 2001 U.S. Census Bureau's
Current Population Survey.